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NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS Stan Fogel is Professor of English and Chairman of the Department of English at St. Jerome's College, University of Waterloo. His recent publications include: The Postmodern University: Essays on the Reconstruction of the Humanities and A Tale of Two Countries: Contemporary Fiction in English Canada and the U.S.A. His current interests are critical theory and the relationship of pedagogy and literature. Ronald G. Haycock is present!y Professor of Military History and Chairman of the War Studies Committee at the Royal Military College of Canada. His most recent book is a biography of Canada's Militia Minister of the Great War, Sir Sam Hughes. He is currently doingresearch on the munitions developments within the British Empire to the end of the Second World War. Richard Kielbowicz is Assistant Professor of Communications at the University of Washington in Seattle. He has written several articles on the Press and Post Office for journals in history, law and social science. During the 1988-89 academic year, he will be studying the effects of the telegraph on the Press, as a postdoctoral fellow at the Smithsonian Institution. Linda Lawson is a lecturer in the School of Journalism at Indiana University, Bloomington. At present, she is finishing her dissertation on U.S. government regulations on the Press, during the early decades of the twentieth century. She is a doctoral candidate in the School of Communications at the University of Washington. Madeline Lennon is Assistant Professor and Co-ordinator of the Western Literature and Civilization section in the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures at the University of Western Ontario. An essay, "Layard's Letters to Morelli," was recently published in Fales and Hickey, eds., Austen Henry Layard Tra l' Oriente e Venezia (Rome, 1987). Her current research is in art history of the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries in England and Italy, as well as an examination of underlying structure in contemporary painting. Peter Lev is Coordinator of the Graduate Program in Mass Communication at Towson State University. He would like to thank Towson State's Faculty Research Committee for its support. Fred Matthews is Associate Professor of History and Humanities at York University , Toronto. His recent publications include: "Hobbesian Populism," Journal of American History, 1985 and "The Coming of the Marshall Plan," Annals of Scholarship, 1988. He is presently working on a book, Enlightenment Rejected. Announcements 135 Roger Seamon is Assistant Professor of English at the University of British Columbia. His most recent publication is "Acts of Narration," Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, XLV/4, Summer, 1987. His current research interest is the history of twentieth-century literary theory. Jason H. Silverman is Associate Professor of History at Winthrop College, South Carolina. He is the author of Unwelcome Guests: Canada West's Response to American Fugitive Slaves, 1800-1865 (1985) and co-editor of volumes two and three of The Frederick Douglass Papers (1982, 1985). He is currently completing a book entitled: Beyond the Melting Pot in Dixie; Immigration and Ethnicity in Southern History, for the University Press of Kentucky series, "New Perspectives on the South." William Stephen Snyder is Professor of English and Cinema at the University of Manitoba. His publications include a book on Pier Paolo Pasolini (1980), an article on Michelangelo Antonioni in Italian Culture (1986), an essay on Fellini in Federico Fellini: Essays in Criticism and a forthcoming article on the psychoanalytic dimensions of the films of William Friedkin in The Canadian Journal of Political and Social Theory. His current research interests include the psychoanalytic tradition. ...

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